Section Editor: Kamran Mirza MD PhD
May 28, 2026
Hemoglobin disorder tests are a group of blood tests used to detect inherited conditions that affect hemoglobin, the protein inside red blood cells that carries oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body. Hemoglobin is normally made of a specific set of building blocks in carefully balanced amounts. When the genes that build hemoglobin contain inherited changes, the body may produce an unusual form of hemoglobin, or may produce too little of one of the normal forms. These conditions are called hemoglobinopathies and include sickle cell disease, the thalassemias, and several less common variants such as hemoglobin C, hemoglobin D, and hemoglobin E disease.
This article explains the main blood tests used to detect and diagnose hemoglobin disorders, what each test measures, what the results may mean, and how the tests are used together. The tests described here may have been ordered because of an abnormal newborn screening result, an unexplained anemia, a family history of a hemoglobin disorder, screening before or during pregnancy, or as part of preoperative evaluation in some clinical situations.
The reference ranges that apply to your results are those printed on your laboratory report, not the typical ranges shown here. Reference ranges and reporting formats vary between laboratories. Some hemoglobin variants are common in certain populations and rare in others, and your doctor will interpret your results in the context of your symptoms, family history, ancestry, and other tests.
Hemoglobin is the protein inside red blood cells that picks up oxygen in the lungs and releases it to tissues throughout the body. Each hemoglobin molecule is built from four smaller protein chains called globin chains, joined to four iron-containing molecules called heme. The globin chains come in different types, and the combination of types determines which form of hemoglobin is produced.
In healthy adults, three forms of hemoglobin are normally present, in characteristic proportions:
Hemoglobin disorders fall into two broad categories:
Hemoglobin disorder tests are designed to identify abnormal hemoglobins, measure the proportions of normal hemoglobins, and detect patterns that indicate specific conditions.
Hemoglobin disorder tests are ordered for many reasons, including:
All the tests described in this article use a small blood sample drawn from a vein in the arm. In newborns, a heel-prick sample is used instead, and the blood is usually placed onto a special filter paper that is sent to a screening laboratory. No fasting or special preparation is needed.
In the laboratory, the tests work by separating the different forms of hemoglobin so they can be identified and measured. Different techniques separate hemoglobins using different physical properties — electrical charge, size, or binding behavior — but the goal of each is the same: to produce a report that shows which hemoglobins are present and in what proportions.
A typical report shows each hemoglobin detected, with its percentage of the total hemoglobin. Results are often available within a few days, although confirmatory and genetic testing may take longer.
Hemoglobin electrophoresis is the classic test for hemoglobin disorders and remains widely used. A small blood sample is placed on a gel or a specialized strip, and an electric current is applied across it. Different hemoglobins carry slightly different electrical charges and travel at different speeds, so over time they separate into distinct bands. The bands are then stained and measured.
Most laboratories perform electrophoresis at two different acidity levels (alkaline and acidic), because some hemoglobin variants that look the same at one pH separate clearly at the other. Using both methods together improves accuracy.
The result is a report showing the percentages of HbA, HbA2, HbF, and any abnormal hemoglobins identified (such as HbS, HbC, or HbE). The percentages, together with the patient’s age and clinical context, are used to identify the underlying condition.
HPLC is a more modern technique that has become the most common method for hemoglobin testing in many laboratories. A small sample of blood is passed through a column that contains a material to which different hemoglobins bind with different strengths. As the hemoglobins are washed through the column, they emerge at different times, and the equipment measures the amount of each as it passes through.
HPLC results are reported as a chromatogram — a graph with peaks corresponding to each hemoglobin detected — and as a table of percentages. HPLC has several advantages over traditional electrophoresis: it is faster, more sensitive, can detect small amounts of abnormal hemoglobin, and can distinguish between some variants that are difficult to separate by electrophoresis. It is now the standard initial test in many newborn screening programs and clinical laboratories.
Capillary electrophoresis is another modern technique that uses the same principle as traditional electrophoresis (separation by electrical charge) but performs the separation inside a very thin tube called a capillary. It is faster, more automated, and more sensitive than gel-based electrophoresis. Many laboratories now use capillary electrophoresis alongside or in place of HPLC. The results are reported in a similar way — as percentages of each hemoglobin detected.
This is a quick screening test specifically for hemoglobin S, the variant that causes sickle cell disease. A small amount of blood is mixed with a chemical that causes hemoglobin S to precipitate from solution, making the mixture appear cloudy. If hemoglobin S is present, the mixture is turbid; if it is absent, the mixture remains clear.
The solubility test is fast and inexpensive but has important limitations. It only detects hemoglobin S — it cannot distinguish sickle cell trait (one abnormal gene) from sickle cell disease (two abnormal genes), nor can it detect other hemoglobin variants such as hemoglobin C or hemoglobin E. It also does not work reliably in newborns, in whom hemoglobin F still dominates. For these reasons, a positive solubility test must be confirmed by electrophoresis or HPLC; the solubility test alone is not sufficient to diagnose sickle cell disease.
This is an older test, now less commonly used, in which a drop of blood is mixed with a chemical (sodium metabisulfite) that reduces the oxygen available to red blood cells. In people with hemoglobin S, low oxygen levels cause red blood cells to take on the characteristic sickle shape, which can be seen under the microscope. As with the solubility test, this method identifies only hemoglobin S and cannot distinguish sickle cell trait from sickle cell disease. It has largely been replaced by HPLC and electrophoresis, but is still used in some settings.
Isoelectric focusing is a specialized form of electrophoresis used in some newborn screening programs. It separates hemoglobins very precisely based on the specific pH at which each one becomes electrically neutral. It is excellent for screening large numbers of newborn samples and for identifying small amounts of variant hemoglobin in samples that still contain mostly fetal hemoglobin.
DNA testing directly examines the genes that encode the globin chains and identifies the specific inherited changes that cause hemoglobin disorders. It is used in several situations:
DNA testing is more sensitive and specific than protein-based tests but is also more expensive and slower. It is usually ordered when the result will meaningfully change management — for confirmation, family planning, or prenatal diagnosis.
Several routine blood tests are usually performed alongside specific hemoglobin testing because they help interpret the results:
The interpretation of hemoglobin testing depends on the specific hemoglobin patterns detected and their proportions. The sections below describe the most common patterns and what they typically indicate. Your doctor will interpret your specific result in context.
A normal adult report shows approximately 95–98% HbA, 2–3.5% HbA2, and less than 1% HbF, with no abnormal hemoglobins detected. This is a reassuring result.
Sickle cell trait is an inherited carrier state in which one copy of the hemoglobin gene produces normal hemoglobin, and the other produces hemoglobin S. The report typically shows about 55–60% HbA and 35–45% HbS, with a small amount of HbA2 and minimal HbF. People with sickle cell trait are usually healthy and do not have anemia, but they can pass the gene on to their children.
In classic sickle cell disease (HbSS), both copies of the gene produce hemoglobin S, and no normal HbA is made. The report typically shows about 80–95% HbS, with elevated HbF (often 5–15%) and a small amount of HbA2. The absence of HbA is the key finding that distinguishes sickle cell disease from sickle cell trait. The blood smear typically shows sickle-shaped red blood cells, target cells, and other characteristic changes.
Other forms of sickle cell disease involve hemoglobin S combined with another abnormal hemoglobin — for example, HbS combined with HbC (called HbSC disease) or with a beta-thalassemia variant (called HbS/beta-thalassemia). Each has its own characteristic pattern on the report and its own clinical features.
People who inherit one normal beta-globin gene and one with reduced production usually have mild anemia, small (microcytic) red blood cells, and a characteristic pattern on hemoglobin testing: HbA2 is elevated, usually above 3.5%, and HbF may be mildly elevated. Iron studies are normal — an important distinction from iron deficiency anemia, which also causes microcytic red blood cells. Beta-thalassemia trait is usually a mild condition that does not require treatment, but it has important implications for family planning.
When both copies of the beta-globin gene are severely affected, very little or no HbA is made. The report shows greatly elevated HbF (often 50–95%), elevated HbA2, and little or no HbA. This is a serious condition that usually becomes apparent within the first year or two of life, with severe anemia and dependence on regular blood transfusions. Beta-thalassemia intermedia is a less severe form between trait and major.
Alpha-thalassemia is more complicated to diagnose because the reduced production of alpha chains affects all of the normal hemoglobins (HbA, HbA2, and HbF), which still appear in roughly normal proportions on a standard report. A standard hemoglobin electrophoresis or HPLC in an adult with alpha-thalassemia trait is often essentially normal.
Alpha-thalassemia is therefore often diagnosed indirectly — by finding small microcytic red blood cells without iron deficiency and without an elevated HbA2 — and then confirmed by DNA testing. In more severe forms, abnormal hemoglobins specific to alpha-thalassemia may appear: hemoglobin Barts (made entirely of gamma chains) in newborns, or hemoglobin H (made entirely of beta chains) in older children and adults. The presence of these abnormal hemoglobins indicates a more severe form of alpha-thalassemia.
Several other inherited hemoglobin variants may be identified on testing:
An elevated level of HbF in an older child or adult may be seen with beta-thalassemia, certain inherited conditions called hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin, treatment with hydroxyurea for sickle cell disease, and some bone marrow conditions. The clinical context determines the significance.
The next steps depend on the result. Possibilities include:
Hemoglobin disorders are inherited conditions, and most cannot be “cured” in the conventional sense. However, modern treatment has substantially improved both quality of life and life expectancy for people with these conditions, and several promising newer therapies are further improving the outlook.